mycroft Posted December 31, 2012 Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 I put a challenge in years (many years) ago. Put two tribes down in the desert with a nomadic experience. Give one Genesis 1/2 for a "creation story" and one the current scientific belief. Which one will be understandable, never mind helpful? Literalist Fundamentalist Christian organizations boggle me to incredulity. When most of the last 2000 years taught by telling stories, and you tell stories and jokes-with-a-point, and the person you claim to worship *clearly* taught by telling stories - there's even a special name for his stories - how could you possibly believe that the rest of the truth only appears by reading literally? Have they ever *talked* to a rabbi? On the other hand, atheists who argue against Christianity by treating the bible as a math text are either doing it knowing what they're doing (in which case, I am either just as boggled by them, if they don't get it, or if they do get it and are playing rhetorical games, that influences my reading of the rest of their argument), or are labelling all Christians by their most vocal brethren (at least in North America). And the readers of Dawkins etc are not (at least not completely) self-selected; there are, in fact, proselytizing Atheists (capital A here). And yes, I do find them as annoying as the proselytizing Christians. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted December 31, 2012 Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 I put a challenge in years (many years) ago. Put two tribes down in the desert with a nomadic experience. Give one Genesis 1/2 for a "creation story" and one the current scientific belief. Which one will be understandable, never mind helpful? Literalist Fundamentalist Christian organizations boggle me to incredulity. When most of the last 2000 years taught by telling stories, and you tell stories and jokes-with-a-point, and the person you claim to worship *clearly* taught by telling stories - there's even a special name for his stories - how could you possibly believe that the rest of the truth only appears by reading literally? Have they ever *talked* to a rabbi? On the other hand, atheists who argue against Christianity by treating the bible as a math text are either doing it knowing what they're doing (in which case, I am either just as boggled by them, if they don't get it, or if they do get it and are playing rhetorical games, that influences my reading of the rest of their argument), or are labelling all Christians by their most vocal brethren (at least in North America). And the readers of Dawkins etc are not (at least not completely) self-selected; there are, in fact, proselytizing Atheists (capital A here). And yes, I do find them as annoying as the proselytizing Christians.I appreciate that many, and I suspect most (outside of certain large areas in the USA) christians are of your general persuasion rather than being fundamentalist. And I further appreciate that for believers such as you appear to be, the bible is more 'story telling' than literal truth. This begs the question, however. Are any parts of the bible, New and Old Testaments, 'true' in that they (accurately) portray actual events or statements? My reading of the Bible suggests that the authors of the various, often inconsistent, parts do not give any explicit clue as to whether a particular passage is intended to be literally true or metaphorical, or allegorical. If I am correct, then the bible becomes a very shaky foundation upon which to build a belief system. I have previously suggested, and this is hardly original to me, that we 'create' our gods in our own image. Studies have indeed shown that we attribute to our 'god' (for those of us with one) attitudes that correspond to our own views of morality, rather than shaping those personal views to reflect the teachings of our holy books. Once one sees the bible as a mix of historical fact and 'story telling' (ie fiction with or without various levels and shades of meaning), the bible becomes a mirror for us to see in it as true that which we would like to be true and to infer from the other passages the meanings that we (or our minister, priest, rabbi, parent, etc) wish to have be valid. The histories of the churches, including the histories of Islam and Judasism, demonstrate the variation in interpretation of the holy books by different leaders over time, resulting in the schisms that have left the religions splintered and often embroiled in sectarian violence. Moving on, there is, it seems to me, a huge difference between: 1. Using the philosophical guidance we extract from ancient texts and the teachings of those who have interpreted those texts in the moral conduct of our lives, and 2. Accepting that the creation myth has any legitimacy at all: that there is a Creator, let alone a creator to whom we should pray and who might in some circumstances interfere in our lives. Frankly, the moral code set out in the bible leaves me cold, and a number of common interpetations of that scare the bejesus out of me, if you'll forgive a terrible turn of phrase. The NT is definitely more in keeping with what I would see as a positive moral guide, but I don't see how one can reconcile the teachings attributed to jesus with the conduct of the god whose son he claimed to be, metaphorically or otherwise. As for your challenge, it is frankly trivial and I would sincerely hope that you don't see the challenge as at all relevant to whether an educated 21st century individual should accept the biblical creation myth as useful. I don't know anyone who argues that religious explanations for the existence of the world, or 'us', were silly thousands of years ago. Let me give you a challenge. Explain how any passage or passages in the bible led to the invention of the significant working components of the means by which you post here. I assume you are using a computer, but you might be using a smartphone or tablet. Explain how the chips were designed by reference to biblical principles. Explain how the internet was established by the power of prayer, and so on. To a nomadic, illiterate tribe, genesis would be 'understandable' tho of no apparent practical benefit, while quantum mechanics would neither understandable or useful. But to those responsible for building and maintaining current industrial and post-industrial societies, I respectively suggest that current scientific understanding is more useful, even if the average user of the technology has little understanding of how it works. What I take from your challenge is simply common sense. To people unable to understand how the universe works other than through the very limited sensory perceptions available to an unequipped, uneducated person, the notion that we are the centre of the universe and that we were created for a purpose, and that we are in our current state because we, as a species, tasted the forbidden fruit of knowledge, etc, all makes some sense. Add to that the power of the astute amongst us to predict such things as the change of the season, and our innate tendency to see causation when there is only correlation, and we can see how prayer could be seen as a useful, if only sporadically effective, tool. As nomads, maybe we pray that the watering hole will be full when we trek there in the spring, or that such crops as we sow in the spring will germninate. We sow seed. We pray for rain. It rains. Therefore the prayer caused the rain. We prayed to a god (or to spirits of ancestors, etc) and the rain came therefore the god or spirits etc listened, and so on. That all makes sense but what does it have to do with being a believer in the supernatural now? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
onoway Posted December 31, 2012 Author Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 The thing I find unfortunate is that as far as I can see, atheists in general are totally unable to comprehend the need of some if not most people to find something outside of themselves to give their lives structure and meaning. Some people are able to cope comfortably with the concept of their lives ultimately being of no more significance than that of a starfish or a dung beetle or pigweed in terms of meaning, others might be driven to despair by the idea. They need to see a point to it all. It's still incomprehensible to me how university educated, intelligent people would have committed suicide to go leap onto the comet's tail a few years back, except in that it shows how desperate people are to believe in something more than themselves to give their existence focus. Telling such people they should not need anything more is like telling someone they don't need anything other than Wonder bread to live on, a sterile,alien, unworkable concept. A side note: I read years and years ago about people who went to Africa to do whatever they went to do there. The ones who denied being remotely superstitious and snorted derisively at those who took the "mumbo jumbo" of witch doctors and tribal leaders seriously, apparently were usually the first to succumb when informed of a ceremony which attacked them. Possibly food for thought, suggesting that respect for the belief systems of others is rarely misplaced, even if not shared. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mgoetze Posted December 31, 2012 Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 Telling such people they should not need anything moreStrawman argument alert. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted December 31, 2012 Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 The thing I find unfortunate is that as far as I can see, atheists in general are totally unable to comprehend the need of some if not most people to find something outside of themselves to give their lives structure and meaning. Some people are able to cope comfortably with the concept of their lives ultimately being of no more significance than that of a starfish or a dung beetle or pigweed in terms of meaning, others might be driven to despair by the idea. They need to see a point to it all. Personally, I find the notion of the existence of such wonderfully complex living entitities as starfish, dung beetles or even pigweed....heck, even e coli...to be wondrous enough. The more one knows about the current theories underlying the existence of anything at all, the more wondrous it is to be alive and to contemplate the diversity of life as we know it. Some of my favourite books....books I pull out and re-read every 5-10 years just for the pure pleasure of it....are books on evolutionary history. Gould's book on the Burgess Shale fossils (I think Wonderful Life is the title) is one of my all time favourites. It's been rendered a bit out of date by the subsequent work on that era and the re-interpretation of some of the fossils, but the title remains very apposite. I think it sad that people are brought up to believe that there has to be a 'purpose' imposed upon us by some unknown entity or force. The concept appears to me to be so limiting. I don't pretend to know the 'why' of the universe or the multi-verse, etc, and I suspect that the very question would make no sense to any person capable of and actually 'knowing' everything. But my lack of knowing 'why' doesn't make me want to invent reasons, the primary purpose of which is to constrain and confine my ability to be astounded by the very fact of existence. And even if some people have such a 'need' and even if that need is innate as opposed to imposed by indoctrination, how does that validate, in any real sense, the answers that are provided by religious belief? How does that need invalidate or not apply to the FSM? The FSM was created to make a point about the absurdity of religion, but and perhaps because of that, it is a valid tool to use when encountering this argument. You 'need' a god in order that you can live a comfortable life? Ok, too bad but that's ok. Go ahead and invent whatever god makes you happy, but keep it the f*&k away from my life. Don't make laws based on your god. Don't educate my children to believe in your god. Don't discriminate against people who don't share your belief, and don't argue that your weakness makes your invention real. It is ironic that my posts (perhaps I am guilty of conceit when I say 'my posts') have caused some to post remarks suggesting that the problem with some atheists is that they assert absolute certainty. I do express (almost) absolute certainty that the major religions are mistaken in their fundamental creation and god myths....even if there is a 'god', the odds must be astronomical that any current religion guessed the right one.....but the truth is, as I see it, that most atheists are most adamant about one thing and one thing only: we reject the false certainty professed by any organized religion, in favour of what appears to be obvious: we don't know and maybe never will know 'everything'. To the mycrofts, my response is more nuanced because, as I understand his position, he agrees that the creation myths are just stories. I think, based on how I read his posts, that he sees his god as some 'force' or concept that underlies and in some unknown and maybe unknowable fashion created and maybe continues to be involved in the universe with some attention paid to humanity. His is largely, I think, a beneficent concept who has set out guidelines for us to follow in our lives. I suspect that if mycroft and I were asked a series of questions designed to elicit our view of the proper moral response to difficult circumstances we'd either agree on all or almost all of them and, when we differed, we'd acknowledge the legitimacy of the other's position. Where we might disagree most is on 'why', in that I would reject any reference to any outside authority and would rely on my own internal reactions. Those reactions are of course influenced by cultural and educational factors, tho studies have shown that basic moral issues are generally seen much the same way across broad ranges of cultural and educational factors. I reject the teachings of the Catholic Church but I am not so naive as to think that the Sunday School lessons left no trace on my psyche, and so on. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mycroft Posted December 31, 2012 Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 Well, getting the information (which we seem to have lost) that you, the humans are in charge of all the animals and plants in your domain (and that includes taking care of them so that they'll still be there later), is an advantage in my supposed challenge. But that wasn't the point. The problem is that you're pulling a switch. "It's obviously story, so why would any rational person believe?" "well, at the time it was written, it was the most useful story, more so than the scientific facts; what, therefore, is truth?" "But how does that work in building our society?" "um, it doesn't. What does that have to do with anything?" You could say the same about history - which we know to be true, and the progress of which has led to this society, but doesn't do anything *now* - so? I happen to like mythology. I am happy to believe that some of the bible, as Truth, is mythology, and that the truth is what you get out of the story, not the story itself. For that, I get it from both sides :-) I know that I am alive due to something beyond myself. In the context of a Christian education, it comes out as a calling from God. In a purely rational explanation, it's pretty much utterly random, and luck. Now I'm alive due to an awful lot of luck, I don't doubt that, and an awful lot of modern medical science, too; but this particular case, if it was just luck, I'd rather it happen again, were I to be back in that circumstance again (which I doubt). How can you believe, looking at the horrible writings and acts? Similarly, how can you not believe, seeing the magnificent? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted December 31, 2012 Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 Well, getting the information (which we seem to have lost) that you, the humans are in charge of all the animals and plants in your domain, and that includes taking care of them so that they'll still be there later) is an advantage in my supposed challenge. But that wasn't the point. But why are we in charge? We aren't in charge at all, and thinking that we are has led to a lot of irrational behaviour. Many on the US political right, for example, believe that we can do anything we like because god wouldn't let us destroy his creation. Others, such as the pope, are against contraception. Some say that we are mandated to 'go forth and mulitiply' and the heck with the consequences. None of which is to deny the validity or wisdom of your interpretation, but it merely highlights the problem with holy writings can be and invariably are read to serve the wishes of the reader. A proper understanding, that we are but one species that has evolved along with all other current living entities, and that we are subject to the laws of physics, and of over-population just as are other species would be far more useful. I don't think those laws are quite as susceptible to being read purely so as to coincide with one's selfish view or wishful thinking. I know that I am alive due to something beyond myself. In the context of a Christian education, it comes out as a calling from God. In a purely rational explanation, it's pretty much utterly random, and luck. Now I'm alive due to an awful lot of luck, I don't doubt that, and an awful lot of modern medical science, too; but this particular case, if it was just luck, I'd rather it happen again, were I to be back in that circumstance again (which I doubt). I don't know what you mean by luck. You and I are accidents, in the sense that we came about without any conscious intention to create 'us'. Our parents and their ancestors may have planned a pregnancy (or not) but they couldn't specify which sperm would fertilize the egg nor what mix of DNA would be inherited nor how our development would proceed in the womb and so on. Going back further, our more distant ancestors lacked conscious volition, and even earlier, lacked even a nervous system, etc. But life was probably very likely to have developed and, once it started, its progression wasn't directed or narrowly constrained but, as I understand current thinking, it wasn't utterly random either. There are only so many ways a piece of self-replicating molecule can be changed and still be self-replicating, and at both the molecular and higher levels of organization, even viable mutations face the risk of failing to preferentially survive. So it isn't 'utterly random' tho it seems to likely be effectively chaotic in many ways. How can you believe, looking at the horrible writings and acts? Similarly, how can you not believe, seeing the magnificent? I understand the first sentence. I completely fail to understand the second. I see the magnificence but why that should cause me to think in religious terms not only escapes me but saddens me that intelligent people are so limited in their imagination and sense of awe that they have to resort to a magic being as 'the explanation'. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vampyr Posted December 31, 2012 Report Share Posted December 31, 2012 The thing I find unfortunate is that as far as I can see, atheists in general are totally unable to comprehend the need of some if not most people to find something outside of themselves to give their lives structure and meaning. Some people are able to cope comfortably with the concept of their lives ultimately being of no more significance than that of a starfish or a dung beetle or pigweed in terms of meaning, others might be driven to despair by the idea. They need to see a point to it all. I feel so sad for such people. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted January 1, 2013 Report Share Posted January 1, 2013 The thing I find unfortunate is that as far as I can see, atheists in general are totally unable to comprehend the need of some if not most people to find something outside of themselves to give their lives structure and meaning. Some people are able to cope comfortably with the concept of their lives ultimately being of no more significance than that of a starfish or a dung beetle or pigweed in terms of meaning, others might be driven to despair by the idea. They need to see a point to it all. It's still incomprehensible to me how university educated, intelligent people would have committed suicide to go leap onto the comet's tail a few years back, except in that it shows how desperate people are to believe in something more than themselves to give their existence focus. Telling such people they should not need anything more is like telling someone they don't need anything other than Wonder bread to live on, a sterile,alien, unworkable concept. A side note: I read years and years ago about people who went to Africa to do whatever they went to do there. The ones who denied being remotely superstitious and snorted derisively at those who took the "mumbo jumbo" of witch doctors and tribal leaders seriously, apparently were usually the first to succumb when informed of a ceremony which attacked them. Possibly food for thought, suggesting that respect for the belief systems of others is rarely misplaced, even if not shared. The thing is, we simply believe that that is the way of the world. This general notion that there must be a God because otherwise it is just too awful has many forms, but, speaking for myself only, I simply don't believe that there is such an entity, and so that's that. I took a course from Robert Ames in college. The course was on Greek humanities, Sophocles and such, but I talked to him some about other matters. He was, by his own description, a Christian Existentialist. Well, this was in the 1950s and we were all reading Sartre and Camus and so on back then, but they were Atheist Existentialists so this Christian Existentialism was of interest. He was very clear about it. With no God, life would have no meaning. He refused to lead a meaningless life. Therefore God exists. If I do his argument an injustice, it is not by much and not intentional. That's what I understood of it. Later I read Reinhold Neibur who I think had some sort of connection with this view but honestly I could never make head nor tail of his writings. I go with the truth as I see it, and as I see it, that means no God. I don't find this to be unfortunate, not at all. I have had a lifelong distaste for being judged or even praised. For example in elementary school I got so tired of my mother telling everyone about my good grades that I set out to deliberately get bad grades. (I succeeded, even beyond my intentions.) While perhaps life everlasting would be lovely, I am not convinced. Life is a wonder, a miracle, with a beginning and an end. Live it in joy and gratitude. Perhaps oddly, the one aspect of my disbelief that occasionally bothers me is that there is no Supreme Being to thank for this life. But then thanking my parents seems like a good idea. I'll go with that. And, before I forget, Happy New Year. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vampyr Posted January 1, 2013 Report Share Posted January 1, 2013 Christian Existentialism was of interest. He was very clear about it. With no God, life would have no meaning. He refused to lead a meaningless life. Therefore God exists. If I do his argument an injustice, it is not by much and not intentional. That's what I understood of it. And, before Well, yes; in a sense all believers are a bit like this, and those who have made arguments for belief on these forums are no different -- ultimately people believe in God because they want to. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted January 1, 2013 Report Share Posted January 1, 2013 In my view, something caused the Primordial Egg to "explode" in the Big Bang. The People of the Book call this something "God". People of other books call it something else. The Chinese, or some of them, call it Taiji (supreme ultimate) and do not anthropomorphize it. I'll go with that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vampyr Posted January 1, 2013 Report Share Posted January 1, 2013 In my view, something caused the Primordial Egg to "explode" in the Big Bang. The People of the Book call this something "God". People of other books call it something else. The Chinese, or some of them, call it Taiji (supreme ultimate) and do not anthropomorphize it. I'll go with that. This doesn't work that well, because where did Taiji come from? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted January 1, 2013 Report Share Posted January 1, 2013 Dunno. Don't know what it is, either. Not something to worship, though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
billw55 Posted January 2, 2013 Report Share Posted January 2, 2013 Goes to show...altho a sample size of two proves little, the atheist knows more about religion than does the typical Xian believer. This is consistent with studies in the US that show that atheists generally have more understanding of the bible than do Xians. Personally, I feel that these sorts of data do suggest that maybe believers are often believers for cultural reasons (i.e. being indoctrinated before the age of critical thinking) than because they understand what it is they profess to believe.Once again you make an assumption of my belief that is not supported by what I have posted. What's more, that assumption is evidently at least negative in your mind, if not outright derogatory. Perhaps I should be offended? I ask a simple a question about a fact which I do not happen to know. You correlate lack of knowledge with Christian belief, and reach this judgement about me. Even making the (dubious) assumption that Christians are generally ignorant, to conclude that one who is ignorant (on one specific point) is therefore Christian is a simple logical fallacy of the form A implies B, therefore B implies A. Or did you reach your conclusion that I am Christian earlier - and if so based on what? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted January 2, 2013 Report Share Posted January 2, 2013 Once again you make an assumption of my belief that is not supported by what I have posted. What's more, that assumption is evidently at least negative in your mind, if not outright derogatory. Perhaps I should be offended? I ask a simple a question about a fact which I do not happen to know. You correlate lack of knowledge with Christian belief, and reach this judgement about me. Even making the (dubious) assumption that Christians are generally ignorant, to conclude that one who is ignorant (on one specific point) is therefore Christian is a simple logical fallacy of the form A implies B, therefore B implies A. Or did you reach your conclusion that I am Christian earlier - and if so based on what?Once again you make an assumption about my attitude that is not supported by what I have posted B-) I have a great deal of respect for many people who are, in addition to the qualities for which I respect them, christians or believers in other forms of the supernatural. I see their religious beliefs in the same manner as I see other minor eccentricities that do not affect the affection and respect I have for them. My 'negative' reaction is to those who claim absolute knowledge and wish to impose their belief structure on others. I haven't 'assumed' that you are a Christian: I inferred it, and any inference is quite possibly in error, being based on the drawing of an inference from evidence that is less than clear. The evidence from which I drew the inference is the totality of your postings, rather than any specific post. If there was one post in particular that seems to weigh more heavily than the others it would be the one in which you express a combination of acknowledging that your limited background leaves you unable to understand the science that has led to the inference that dark energy may exist (I gather that dark energy is but one of several hypotheses under consideration as an explanation for the observed accelerating of the expansion of the universe, but is the leading candidate so far) and a skepticism that the theory could be true. Your skepticism isn't based on knowledge: it seems based precisely on: 'I don't understand it therefore it can't be true'. You then make what I read as a sarcastic reference to 'my' theory of the gaps. While I would love to be able to claim original thinking, nothing I have posted in this and related threads is original to me. The 'god of the gaps' is a well-known tho fallacious argument that because we cannot yet explain everything by application of the scientific method, what is left...what is in the gaps of our knowledge...should logically be assumed to be supernatural in origin.That sort of attitude appears, in my experience, to be most commonly found in religious believers. I am aware that some might say that I am displaying precisely the same attitude towards religion, but my opinion is that I do in fact understand religion quite well. Indeed the point I was trying to make in the post that triggered your response was that it appears that the more one understands religion, the less likely one is to be religious :D If I am mistaken, and if you feel that being thought of as a christian is offensive, then I have done you an injustice and I apologize. Those friends of mine who are christian don't seem to be offended that I know of them as christians, and I don't think I'm personally be offended if someone for any reason described me as christian (tho I'd probably clarify what my position was, rather than leave them guessing). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mycroft Posted January 2, 2013 Report Share Posted January 2, 2013 But why are we in charge? Who has the power has the responsibility, no?We aren't in charge at all, and thinking that we are has led to a lot of irrational behaviour. Many on the US political right, for example, believe that we can do anything we like because god wouldn't let us destroy his creation. Others, such as the pope, are against contraception. Some say that we are mandated to 'go forth and mulitiply' and the heck with the consequences.Matthew 13:14-17. Truly, you can see that there are those who have ears and do not hear, eyes and do not see; are given the truth as stories and choose not to understand? In particular with the current Pontiff, I would add that the inbred nature of any powerful bureaucracy, especially a closed hierarchical one, breeds the kind of closed-mindedness and groupthink that leads to this and worse. After all, even the Catholics admit to several "bad popes". You don't need a mystical being to pull that - although I will admit a belief that can be twisted into self-righteousness easily doesn't make it harder. A proper understanding, that we are but one species that has evolved along with all other current living entities, and that we are subject to the laws of physics, and of over-population just as are other species would be far more useful. I don't think those laws are quite as susceptible to being read purely so as to coincide with one's selfish view or wishful thinking.It's so *nice* to see such naivete in the world. Isaiah, the Psalmist, and Jesus weren't *wrong* with "none are so blind as will not see", even if one takes as read that their beliefs were also wrong. *We* aren't going to have a problem with over-population, and many aren't going to have a problem with lack of petroleum. Our children? Well, there are many reasons why I don't have children; but this is screamingly one of them. Other topic.I don't know what you mean by luck.Well, apart from being born white and nerdy in 20th Century Canada, in a world where university education for engineering was extra-cost, so $450 a term each for courses and books, and living in a country where the amount of medical treatment to keep me alive, and later to fix the problem, didn't bankrupt me for life, I didn't get run over by a car, or shot in the street, or ... But life was probably very likely to have developed and, once it started, its progression wasn't directed or narrowly constrained but, as I understand current thinking, it wasn't utterly random either. There are only so many ways a piece of self-replicating molecule can be changed and still be self-replicating, and at both the molecular and higher levels of organization, even viable mutations face the risk of failing to preferentially survive. So it isn't 'utterly random' tho it seems to likely be effectively chaotic in many ways.Ah, but I was discussing strictly myself, and that one random thought that stopped the worst day of my life; and whether it was purposeful or merely the same chemical randomness that makes me guess right in 3NT. I understand the first sentence. I completely fail to understand the second. I see the magnificence but why that should cause me to think in religious terms not only escapes me but saddens me that intelligent people are so limited in their imagination and sense of awe that they have to resort to a magic being as 'the explanation'.It saddens me that creative and imaginative people are so limited in their imagination that they take the wonder of the universe strictly on reason, and not even play with the mystic. Woo is one thing, but:“Ki is, of course, mystical bullshit. That’s why it works so well, both as a teaching idiom and a tool of practice in martial arts. It’s as nonexistent as charm, leadership, or acting. Humans are all about bullshit.” (Andrew Plotkin) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted January 2, 2013 Report Share Posted January 2, 2013 It saddens me that creative and imaginative people are so limited in their imagination that they take the wonder of the universe strictly on reason, and not even play with the mystic. Woo is one thing, but:I suspect our visceral reactions to the palpable wonders of the world as susceptible to our senses are much the same. We all have within our brains a part that, when stimulated, gives us a sense of 'spirituality'. I can look into the night sky and feel awed. I can try, and fail, to comprehend the vastness of just what we can see, which is a tiny fraction of what is out there (or 'was' out there when the photons impacting our eyes were emitted from the stars/galaxies etc that we see). My sense of awe is not then channelled towards an imaginary entity. My sense of awe informs a sense of mystery and a yearning for an explanation. My sense of reason tells me that the cop-out explanation that 'god did it' is neither plausible nor of any assistance. Who caused god? And saying that god is that which causes itself is a nice turn of phrase but is essentially void of content. One of the many strange and fascinating attributes of language is that we can use words that meet all the formal requirements of grammar but which are either utterly meaningless (tho superficially attractive) or become, on close analysis to be tautological (which may be me being tautological myself). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
billw55 Posted January 2, 2013 Report Share Posted January 2, 2013 Once again you make an assumption about my attitude that is not supported by what I have posted B-) I have a great deal of respect for many people who are, in addition to the qualities for which I respect them, christians or believers in other forms of the supernatural. I see their religious beliefs in the same manner as I see other minor eccentricities that do not affect the affection and respect I have for them. My 'negative' reaction is to those who claim absolute knowledge and wish to impose their belief structure on others. I haven't 'assumed' that you are a Christian: I inferred it, and any inference is quite possibly in error, being based on the drawing of an inference from evidence that is less than clear. The evidence from which I drew the inference is the totality of your postings, rather than any specific post. If there was one post in particular that seems to weigh more heavily than the others it would be the one in which you express a combination of acknowledging that your limited background leaves you unable to understand the science that has led to the inference that dark energy may exist (I gather that dark energy is but one of several hypotheses under consideration as an explanation for the observed accelerating of the expansion of the universe, but is the leading candidate so far) and a skepticism that the theory could be true. Your skepticism isn't based on knowledge: it seems based precisely on: 'I don't understand it therefore it can't be true'. You then make what I read as a sarcastic reference to 'my' theory of the gaps. While I would love to be able to claim original thinking, nothing I have posted in this and related threads is original to me. The 'god of the gaps' is a well-known tho fallacious argument that because we cannot yet explain everything by application of the scientific method, what is left...what is in the gaps of our knowledge...should logically be assumed to be supernatural in origin.That sort of attitude appears, in my experience, to be most commonly found in religious believers. I am aware that some might say that I am displaying precisely the same attitude towards religion, but my opinion is that I do in fact understand religion quite well. Indeed the point I was trying to make in the post that triggered your response was that it appears that the more one understands religion, the less likely one is to be religious :D If I am mistaken, and if you feel that being thought of as a christian is offensive, then I have done you an injustice and I apologize. Those friends of mine who are christian don't seem to be offended that I know of them as christians, and I don't think I'm personally be offended if someone for any reason described me as christian (tho I'd probably clarify what my position was, rather than leave them guessing).Interesting. Of course, I do not entirely understand the science behind dark matter and dark energy theory. I doubt anyone on this board does, unless they are professional physicists. That said, I suspect that I understand the science about as well as you do. The difference is that I take a more skeptical view. I am sure you know that skepticism is not the same as disbelief. I have said quite clearly, that it could be true. However, the fact that these theories are currently the most popular candidates for explaining certain observations, does not particularly motivate me one way or the other. The history of science is full of fad theories which didn't pan out, or were outright contradicted. For example, even recently, a large amount of work went into string theory. Not much came of it all, and it is no longer fashionable. Dark stuff theory, on the other hand, is very fashionable ... for now. Will it remain so? We'll see. If reserving judgement pending a couple more decades of thought and observations flags me as a suspect Christian, or some other sort of addled thinker, I guess I can live with that. On a more technical side, I would point to a well known marker of good theories: they make predictions which are not directly related to the matters they were designed to explain, and which can be tested by observation. Do any such predictions arise from dark stuff theory? If so, have the experiments been done, and what were the results? Perhaps there is some information out there that I am unaware of, and which is more convincing. As for the sarcastic gap reference, I intended it as humor. Not my strong point evidently :P Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cyberyeti Posted January 11, 2013 Report Share Posted January 11, 2013 http://www.theonion.com/articles/gorilla-sales-skyrocket-after-latest-gorilla-attac,30860/ 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted January 11, 2013 Report Share Posted January 11, 2013 I've heard the bow sales in US rised by several times after hunger games movie. Its just another example of people stupidly over-reacting. I saw a story on facebook yesterday, some old women almost got killed by a falling tree in Barcelona, neighbours where really concern... but one woman didn't care, why? well she know some statistics, being killed by a tree on a non-windy city is almost impossible, even if it almost happened now it will not almost happen anytime soon. Perhaps teaching basic maths is more helpful than teaching why guns are dangerous. The worse episode of over-reacing happened after al-qaeda murdered more than 300 people in Madrid some years ago. People got scared, and since elections where the very next day, changed their votes to the party the terrorist wanted to win, this party has managed to send Spain to the worst financial crisis I have lived. in 40M population country, more than 500.000 people die per year, that's around 1.500 a day. Should we really be scared for 300 deaths? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vampyr Posted January 11, 2013 Report Share Posted January 11, 2013 The worse episode of over-reacing happened after al-qaeda murdered more than 300 people in Madrid some years ago. People got scared, and since elections where the very next day, changed their votes to the party the terrorist wanted to win, this party has managed to send Spain to the worst financial crisis I have lived. in 40M population country, more than 500.000 people die per year, that's around 1.500 a day. Should we really be scared for 300 deaths? I hope no terrorists are reading these forums! It would be terrible if more of them realised that they can do a lot more damage by using their acts to manipulate the political/financial spheres instead of "simply" killing people. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted January 11, 2013 Report Share Posted January 11, 2013 Give that you posted on the religion thread to attack me just before writing this, I supose you are also attacking me here, probably using some irony. But I am sorry, I don't understand what you mean. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Vampyr Posted January 11, 2013 Report Share Posted January 11, 2013 Give that you posted on the religion thread to attack me just before writing this, I supose you are also attacking me here, probably using some irony. But I am sorry, I don't understand what you mean. I don't understand what you mean either. I did not say you are a terrorist; I have no particular reason to think you are. Try not to be paranoid. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted January 11, 2013 Report Share Posted January 11, 2013 well maybe you think I don't care about 300 people dying, or 21 in connecticut. Well I do care, I just care so little compared to hundreds of thousands slaughtered on Africa or dying from starvation. By about a thousand times less. and I think people are wrong when overreacting to 21 or 300 deaths when there are much more important things going on. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted January 11, 2013 Report Share Posted January 11, 2013 I have been very lucky and know of nobody who has been ransom or been attacked by terrorists, and I realice that if I had I might change my views here, but as it is now I think: -If nobody payed ever any rescue (or attend any petition) on ransoms there would be no ransoms since they would be pointless.-For the same reason if terrorist acts didn't go to any kind of news there would be no point for them (or much less). And there would also be less point in mass murders. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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